Gov. Albert Bryan Jr. recently returned from Panama, where he joined regional leaders to discuss Caribbean trade expansion and investment opportunities for the U.S. Virgin Islands.
The talks centered on establishing free zone frameworks that could reshape how the territory positions itself economically beyond federal recovery funding.
What Free Zones Could Mean for the Territory
Free trade zones allow goods to be imported, stored, and re-exported without standard customs duties or taxes. For St. Thomas, such a model could attract logistics companies, light manufacturing, and warehousing operations that currently bypass the Caribbean altogether.
“This is about building an economy that does not depend on one industry,” Bryan said in a statement released by Government House. “We are talking about creating jobs, attracting investment, and making the Virgin Islands a hub, not just a stopover.”
The governor framed the Panama discussions as part of a broader push to diversify the territory’s economic base. The USVI has long relied on tourism and federal disaster recovery dollars. Both sectors remain vital, but officials say over-reliance leaves the islands vulnerable to external shocks.
Local Impact Questions
Residents on St. Thomas have heard promises of economic transformation before. The St. Thomas-St. John Chamber of Commerce has repeatedly called for clearer timelines and concrete benchmarks.
“We support the idea of economic development,” chamber president Maria Hughes said. “But we need to see the details. Free zones work when they connect to local hiring, local contracts, and local benefit.”
Hughes pointed to the territory’s history of announced projects that stalled or shifted course. “The question is always implementation,” she said. “We have had trade talks before. We have had investment conferences before. The difference this time is the governor’s personal involvement.”
Regional Context
Panama itself operates one of the world’s largest free trade zones, the Colon Free Trade Zone, handling more than $19 billion in annual trade. The model has drawn interest from other Caribbean jurisdictions seeking to capture logistics and light manufacturing investment.
“The Caribbean is competing for the same capital,” said Dr. Carla Bennett, an economist at the University of the Virgin Islands. “Free zones can work, but they require infrastructure, workforce training, and regulatory clarity. Without those, they become empty zones.”
Bennett noted that St. Thomas has natural advantages, including the deepwater harbor at Crown Bay and proximity to Puerto Rico. But she cautioned that free zones elsewhere have sometimes generated low-wage jobs with limited local hiring.
What Comes Next
Government House has not released a timeline for any formal free zone proposal. The governor’s office said additional announcements are expected in the coming weeks.
For St. Thomas residents, the stakes are straightforward: new jobs, new investment, and a chance to reduce dependence on federal disaster funding that has dominated the territory’s finances since 2017.
“We are at a crossroads,” Bryan said. “The decisions we make now will determine whether the Virgin Islands becomes a true economic player in this region or remains dependent on outside money.”








